Muir v. Bozarth

44 Iowa 499
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 23, 1876
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 44 Iowa 499 (Muir v. Bozarth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Muir v. Bozarth, 44 Iowa 499 (iowa 1876).

Opinion

Day, J.

i. conveystatutefofud: limitations, I. The facts in this case, which are clearly established by the testimony, are very fully and accurately stated in the introduction to appellant’s argument, as follows: “On the 19th day of September, 1854, the plaintiff, John Muir, entered the west half of' [500]*500the northeast quarter, section 2, township 67, range 26, in Decatur county, Iowa. At that time, and some eight months prior, the defendant, Jonathan Bozarth, owned in fee simple and resided on the east half of said quarter section. After the plaintiff entered the land in question, the defendant, Bozarth, with knowledge of plaintiff’s entry, laid a foundation for a house on the land in dispute, and moved his house in which he was then living on the foundation, moved his family in the house, claimed pre-emption and commenced improving the land in dispute. On the 7th day of April (1855), defendant, 4n the absence of plaintiff and without his knowledge, proved up his pre-emption and entered the land in controversy. Afterwards plaintiff obtained a rehearing on defendant’s pre-emption, and the cause was set for trial before the register of the land office at Chariton, Iowa, on the 8th day of November, 1856. On the 1st day of. October, 1856, the defendants, Bozarth and wife, conveyed, by warranty deed, the land in dispute to one W. S. Warnock, his attorney. Plaintiff and defendant, Bozarth, met at Chariton on the 8th of November, 1856, and compromised. It was agreed that plaintiff was the owner of the land, but, as plaintiff’s entry had been set aside, that defendant’s entry should stand, and plaintiff was to withdraw his entrance money. Plaintiff was to pay defendant, Bozarth, three hundred dollars for improvements and entrance money, and Bozarth and wife were to make plaintiff a warranty deed to the land in dispute. Two hundred dollars were then paid to Bozarth, and one hundred dollars, by agreement, were left with one John Leachman to be paid defendant when he made a deed to the land.

Bozarth gave plaintiff a bond for a deed and contract to deliver possession of the land on the 1st day of May following. Plaintiff and defendant then separated; plaintiff went to his home in the State of Indiana, and defendant came with John Leachman to his home in Decatur county. Afterwards Bozarth refused to make the deed, and informed Leachman that he had conveyed the land in dispute to W. S. Warnock. Leachman immediately wrote to plaintiff of the refusal of defendant to make the deed, and of the conveyance to War[501]*501nock. Muir wrote to Leachman to hold on to the bond and money.

On the 27th of March, 1857, Bozarth procured a reconveyance of'the land from W. S. Warnock and wife, and on the same day made Leachman a tender of a deed from defendant and wife to John Muir, and demanded of Leachman the hundred dollars, without informing Leachman that he had procured a reconveyance from Warnock and wife. Leachman informed the defendant that he could not receive the deed until he could hear from Muir; defendant then said to Leach-man, ‘ now or never,’ and took the deed and went away. On the 15th day of June, 1857, the defendants, Bozarth and wife, conveyed the land by warranty deed to one Richard Groce. In the fall of 1857, plaintiff came to Iowa, tendered Bozarth one hundred dollars and demanded a deed for the land in dispute, which Bozarth refused to make. In 1857, plaintiff commenced an action on the bond against defendants to enforce the specific performance of the contract. Afterwards plaintiff learned of the conveyance to Groce, and by an amended or substituted petition, Groce and wife were made parties defendant to said action, alleging fraud as to Bozarth, and notice to Groce of plaintiff’s equitie's, without any knowledge or information as to whether Groce had knowledge of plaintiff’s rights or riot. Bozarth and Groce both answered, denying notice to Groce of plaintiff’s equities. Plaintiff, to sustain his action, took the deposition of defendant, Bozarth, who testified in said action that Groce had no notice or knowledge of plaintiff’s equities at the time he conveyed the land to Groce; that the sale to Groce was absolute and in good faith so far as Groce was concerned. Plaintiff, believing from the testimony of defendant, Bozarth, that Groce was an innocent purchaser of the land in dispute, took a nonsuit. So the matter rested; the title to the land in dispute remaining in Richard Groce until December 17, 1870, when defendant, Bozarth, commenced an action against the heirs of Richard Groce to recover the legal title to the land in question, alleging the death of Groce, and .that the conveyance from him to Groce was intended as a mortgage to [502]*502secure borrowed money, and that the money was paid back during Groce’s lifetime.

On the trial of this cause, Bozarth testified to the allegations of the petition and the court decreed the land to defendant Bozarth, and appointed a commissioner who conveyed the land in dispute by deed to defendant, which deed was approved by the court, April 6th, 1871.

During all this time plaintiff resided in the State of Indiana, and in July, 1872, for the first time, he obtained knowledge that Bozarth had obtained the title to the land in dispute, and that his testimony in the original case between plaintiff and defendant, Bozarth, and Groce, was false in regard to Groce being a bona fide and an absolute purchaser without notice. On July 3d, 1872, plaintiff commenced this action. The land in dispute has been fenced and in a good state of cultivation from twelve to eighteen years, and defendant, Bozarth, received the rents and profits during all of this time, which were worth from two dollars to two dollars and fifty cents per acre per year.”

These facts show that defendant acquired and has maintained title to the property in controversy, by frauds shocking to every sense of justice. He has been guilty not only of deception, and a violation of his contract, but of positive perjury. Where there has been such a gross violation of every principle of honesty, equity will discover some means of affording relief, unless some well defined principle of law obstructs the pathway to justice. The principal objection urged is that the plaintiff’s action is barred by the statute of limitations. If this action were based solely upon the bond for conveyance, the statute of limitations would be an insuperable obstacle. But the conveyance to Groce introduced a new element. It cast upon plaintiff the necessity of showing, before he could have a specific performance of the agreement, that this conveyance was in fraud of his rights. After this conveyance was made, his action became of necessity one for relief on the ground of fraud. It is true, the bond for conveyance constitutes the primary ground of the obligation of defendant. But, if the deed to Groce was absolute'and- bona fide, the defendant [503]*503had created an obstacle to a decree of specific performance. This obstacle could be removed, and the relief desired obtained, only by showing that the deed to Groce was as to plaintiff fraudulent. That the deed was so fraudulent was not discovered until July, 1872, and this action was brought, at the farthest, within two days thereafter. The action is not, therefore, barfed by the statute of limitations. .Revision, section 2741.

It is objected, however, that plaintiff had full knowledge that the deed to Groce was fraudulent, as early as 1858, for that he alleges such fraud in the supplemental petition in the action against Bozarth and Groce.

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Bluebook (online)
44 Iowa 499, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/muir-v-bozarth-iowa-1876.